ANTHROPOLOGY. 



8?>.S 



the other belongs to the whole si)eeies nither tliaii to. ;iny of its three 

 divisions. 



In this resume we shall have space to mention but one other charac- 

 teristic, stature : 



Nomenclature of stature. 



Combining this mark with all previously mentioned. Dr. Topinard 

 groups the races studied as follows : 



Vivo nasal index. 



Wliite subspe 

 cie.s, Lept 

 rrhine 



H 



Yellow subspe- 

 «'ics, Meso-< 

 rrliiue. 



Black subspe- 

 cies, riaty- 

 irliino. 



Hair. 



Wavy (oval sec- 

 tion). 



Coarse, straiglit 

 round section, 

 long on tbo 

 head, b o d y j 

 glabrous. 



I 



Busby (oval sec- 

 tion). 



Woolly (ellipti-, 

 cal section). ^ 



Cranial index. 



1) ol i c b oc o- I 

 pbiilic. ') 



Mesaticeplialic . 



Bracbyce-J 

 pbalic. } 



D o 1 i c b o c e - 1 

 pbalic. \ 



Mesaticepbalic 

 (.76.) 



B r a c b y c e • ) 

 pbalic. j 



I 

 Dolicbocepbalic. 



D ol i cb oc - 

 ph.alic. 



Mesaticepbalic . 

 Bracbycepbalic . 



Skin color. Height. 



Blonde... 



Ruddy . . . 

 Brewn . . . 



..-do 



...do 



Chestnut . 



Tel low ... 



Reddish .. 

 ...do 



...do 



Yellow . . . 



Yellowish. 

 Olivish - - . 

 Black 



Yellowish. 

 Black 



Black . 

 ..do.. 

 ...do .. 



Tall 



...do 



Short (rela 



tive). 

 ...do 



Short 



Medium . - . 



Short 



Tall 



-do 



...do 



Short 



Medium . . . 



Sbort 



Tall 



Very short. 



Tall 



.do.... 

 Medium 

 Short . . . 



Races. 



Anglo-Scandinavi- 

 ans. 

 Finns, t.vpe I. 

 Mediteiraueans. 



Semites, Egyp- 

 tians. 

 Lai)]).s, LiLTuriaus. 

 Celto-Siavr,. 

 Eskimo. 

 Tehuelchi"'. 

 rolyuesiau.s. 



,of 



Redskins. 

 Yellow race 



Asia). 

 Guaranis. 

 Peiuvian.M. 

 Australians. 



Bushmen (steato- 

 py;;iaus.) 



Molanesians (eye- 

 brow salient, 

 nose deep at the 

 roo(). 



African negroes. 



'I'asinaniaus. 



Kegritos. 



COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY. 



Prof. Alexander Bain read a paper at the Aberdeen meeting of the 

 British Association on the scope of anthropology and its relation to the 

 science of mind. Thp whole burden of the essay was to insist upon 

 amenability to measurements as the password of any set of human phe- 

 nomena to the section of anthropology. This is as it should be. Mr. 

 Bain further pointed out a great variety of mind actions which were 

 already under the instrument of precision, and others which ought to 

 be and could be. "Psychology has now a very large area of neutral 

 iiiforniation. It possesses materials gathered by the same methods of 

 rigorous observation and induction that are followed in the other sci- 

 ences. If these researches are persisted in they will go still further 

 H. Mis. la 53 



